Artificial Intelligence May Be Humanity’s Most Ingenious Invention—And Its Last?

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Artificial Intelligence May Be Humanity’s Most Ingenious Invention—And Its Last?
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Silicon Valley is barreling ahead with AI technology that could unlock novel forms of creativity, art, and medicine, and potentially, wipe out all mankind. As one AI engineer warns, “We’re creating God.”

on its new AI tool for producing news stories. People who made a living doing voiceover for books, TV, and podcasts are already seeing their art form replaced by a slew of AI start-ups. And budding artists who were setting off for art school to study painting, illustration, and graphic design are rethinking what to do with their futures.

Over the next few years, AI start-ups skyrocketed. “We’re seeing more AI-related products and advancements in a single day than we saw in a single year a decade ago,” a Silicon Valley product manager told me. “It’s almost impossible to keep up.” There are now more than 14,700 AI start-ups in the United States alone . And the top AI companies are raising $3 billion a month in funding, per investment tracker Crunchbase. Last year, AI revenue accounted for $51.27 billion of the global economy.

While Murphy isn’t in the Valley, from what he’s seen, he couldn’t agree more. “I think there will be a monster amount of money behind AI, everyone in Silicon Valley is going to try to build it as quickly as possible, not do what is necessarily safe for humanity,” he said. Nowhere does that thesis ring truer than the Pioneer Building in San Francisco, home of OpenAI.a god. An AI messiah. He’s fawned over in news articles. Doted on in interviews.

Unlike the Marc Andreessens of the world, who act like AI is going to be all rainbows, sunshine, and fairy dust, Murati, to my surprise, admitted that things will absolutely go wrong with AI, but that her job is to ensure that when they do, they can be stopped and fixed as quickly as possible. “So I don’t think the goal is to have absolutely no risks,” she said. “It is to reduce the amount of risk in the near term, and to be able to respond very quickly when it happens.

The QUESTION CIRCULATING around Silicon Valley isn’t if such a scenario is worth it, even with a 1 PERCENT CHANCE OF ANNIHILATION, but rather, if it is really such a bad thing if we build a machine that CHANGES HUMAN LIFE AS WE KNOW IT.

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